Jon Peddie Research’s annual GPU Market and Products report consolidates GPU developments for 2024. It includes announcements by the leading GPU suppliers, market size and share, and benchmark results.
The global PC GPU market exceeded 251 million units in 2024, with a 6% year-over-year increase. More GPUs (~24%) are shipped each year than CPUs.
The information is presented in chronological order by quarter and includes shipment data, new product introduction, benchmark results, and associated information on new standards.
This seventh edition of GPU developments is a compendium of reports from our client service TechWatch; our testing service, Mt. Tiburon Testing Labs; our quarterly market report on GPUs, Market Watch; our semi-annual Workstation report; and our quarterly Add-in Board report; as well as excerpts from our semi-annual PC Gaming Hardware Market Study report, in addition to our reports and studies on mobile devices, TV gaming, and digital content creation.
Although it is thorough, we do not claim it to be exhaustive of each and every announcement made by the suppliers.
The 208-page report contains 155 charts and illustrations, 24 tables, and a comprehensive index. The following stories are included.
Table of Contents
- Forward
- INTRODUCTION
- GPUs, cards, and AIBs
- Where do GPUs come from?
- Where do GPUs go?
- Integrated vs. discrete performance
- Platforms and processors
- When did a GPU become an SoC?
- What is a GPU these days 25—years later?
- HIGHLIGHTS OF THE YEAR
- THE FIRST QUARTER OF 2024
- Quarterly GPU shipments were down -10%, has seasonality returned?
- Nvidia rounds out its RTX 4000 Super series with the RTX 4080 Super
- Nvidia extends the Ada-generation laptop GPU line
- Nvidia RTX 2000 is small but fierce
- What makes a good computing system performance benchmark?
- Experimental GPUs from DIYers
- Microsoft thinks LOD will speed up RT
- Modder update for older Nvidia AIBs
- Nvidia Ada workstation board is memory-rich
- Ada’s life will end on February 1, 2025
- VESA updates Adaptive-Sync Display standard
- AMD’s 16GB RX 7600 XT is official
- Nvidia’s Chinese chip may create demand for Chinese GPUs
- Imagination and MulticoreWare get 50 GFLOPS of extra compute from Texas Instruments TDA4VM processor
- Nvidia introduces its new editions to the 4000 series line
- Exynos 2400 Xclipse 940 GPU looks ready for battle
- Nvidia: A new era of AI PCs is here
- Nvidia rounds out its RTX 4000 Super series with the RTX 4080 Super
- THE SECOND QUARTER OF 2024
- Quarterly GPU shipments were up 1.8%, and seasonality not in sight
- X-Silicon’s low-power, open-standard, Vulkan-enabled C-GPU
- Think Silicon demos GPUs for embedded and wearables at Embedded World
- Squeezing more out of Ampere
- VESA enhances HDR display performance for PCs
- Chaos V-Ray 6 Benchmark
- Breaking Limit ray-tracing benchmark from Basemark
- Intel introduces Lunar Lake and Xe2 GPU architecture at Taipei tech event
- Semiconductor companies’ R&D and inventories
- The SR-71 of computing—Intel Ponte Vecchio retires after five years
- Ponte Vecchio’s replacement, Falcon Shores, speculation
- Focusing on GPU power consumption misses the point
- Battlemage is ready for war!
- Intel’s new Xe2 graphics deliver impressive frame rates in F1 24
- What has AI done for graphics?
- Intel’s embedded Arc AIBs
- Nvidia vs. Intel vs. AMD AI
- AMD ups its Fidelity Super Resolution by 0.1
- Imagination GPU joins SiFive CPU and NPU in Eswin RISC-V edge computing SoC
- Nvidia’s DLSS keeps winning hearts, minds, and wallets
- THE THIRD QUARTER OF 2024
- 3rd-quarter GPU shipments were up 3.4%. Is seasonality returning?
- AMD iGPU about eight years behind a dGPU
- Do we have enough shaders?
- AMD’s major advancement in frame-generation technology for AMD HYPR-RX
- AMD possible ray-tracing improvements
- Arm enters the RT scaling race
- Intel Arcs into automotive with a dGPU
- Imagination announces new automotive GPU
- GPU start-up Xiangdixian Computing Technology in financial difficulty
- Intel puts its best iGPU foot forward
- Loongson’s newest GPU
- AMD to integrate CDNA and RDNA architectures to compete in AI
- Taking a look at Q3’24 AIB price movements
- THE FOURTH QUARTER OF 2024
- AMD’s new MI325X Instinct AI GPU
- AMD introduces a new GPU for laptop gaming
- Intel introduces long-awaited Battlemage-based AIBs
- GPUs to the rescue for Intel
- Intel Arc B580 and AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D—great performance for a few dollars
- INDEX
JPR also publishes a series of reports on the graphics add-in board market, the workstation market, and PC gaming hardware market. The latter covers the total market, including systems and accessories, and examines 31 countries.
The new 2025 edition of GPUs 2024: Markets and Products contains the above information and more.
Pricing and availability
JPR’s GPUs 2024: Markets and Product is available in an electronic edition and sells for $1,000. It can be downloaded here.
About Jon Peddie Research
Jon Peddie Research has been active in the graphics and multimedia fields for more than 30 years. JPR is a technically oriented multimedia and graphics research and consulting firm. Based in Tiburon, California, JPR provides consulting, research, and other specialized services to technology companies in various fields, including graphics development, multimedia for professional applications and consumer electronics, high-end computing, and Internet-access product development. JPR’s Market Watch is a quarterly report focused on PC graphics controllers’ market activity for notebook and desktop computing.
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